I was filling entire school notebooks with stories by Grade 3. Of course, they were double-spaced, and the handwriting was huge.
Being Premier is a 24/7 job, so it doesn't create many spaces in order to be able to build relationships.
People invade your space and offend your sensibilities because, to be plain, they couldn't care less about you.
People hang their hopes on you fitting into their CD collection in way that they have made a space for, but I'm playing a longer game than that.
Whenever I watch a documentary about the space, I find the news in the world very funny and dull!
We have enough space in our hearts, but we are afraid of allowing animals shit and mess around with our feelings.
In some sense, gravity does not exist; what moves the planets and the stars is the distortion of space and time.
Sometimes in life there's no problem and sometimes there solution. Within this space - between these apparent poles - life flows.
We regarded each other across an expanse wider than the universe, within a space thinner than a razor's edge.
I've always been interested in space and the idea of exploration in that area since I was a child growing up through the '60s.
Circles create soothing space, where even reticent people can realize that their voice is welcome.
It is theoretically possible to warp spacetime itself, so you're not actually moving faster than the speed of light, but it's actually space that's moving.
There are hundreds of thousands of words that aren't in any print dictionary today... because there's no space for all of them.
I write for myself, and my goal is bringing that world and that experience of black Americans to life on the stage and giving it a space there.
My expertise is the space program and what it should be in the future based on my experience of looking at the transitions that we've made between pre-Sputnik days and getting to the moon.
I grew up like Huck Finn, always outdoors, exploring, collecting frogs - there was space everywhere. I want my kids to experience that too. I love being outside.
When it comes to Fashion Week, I'm over the too-cool-for-school runway experience with loud music in a raw space that's inconvenient for everyone.
I love the freedom of having my own space and my own place and doing things on my terms, and not really having to think about anybody else's schedule.
Questioning the nature and implications of liminal instances necessarily involves failure, if only in the specifically technical sense of entering spaces where prevailing criteria of success scarcely apply.
Who among us has never looked up into the heavens on a starlit night, lost in wonder at the vastness of space and the beauty of the stars?
Your billion-dollar ideas don't show up in the middle of dramatic distraction. They show up when you have the business and personal discipline to make space for your creative mind to flourish.